148 HARPER 



flower. Also seen once in Sumter County and once on the 

 mountains of Northwest Georgia. 

 Widely distributed in the Eastern United States. 



L. gracilis (Pursh) Kuntze, 1. c. 



Rather dry-pine-barrens, berrien (1683), worth. Also in 



Thomas County, a little south of our limits. Fl. Oct. 

 South to central Florida, west to Louisiana (?). 

 L. graminifolia (Walt.) Kuntze, 1. c. 



Dry pine-barrens, irwin, berrien, colquitt. Fl. Sept.-Oct. 

 Virginia to Florida and Alabama, in the Piedmont region 

 and coastal plain. 

 L. spicata (L.) Kuntze, 1. c. 



Moist pine-barrens, dodge, coffee, wilcox, irwin, berrien, 

 dooly, colquitt (1652). Fl. Aug.-Oct. Also in Sumter 

 County. 

 Widely distributed in the Eastern United States, but in the 

 South apparently confined to the coastal plain. 

 L. tenuifolia (Nutt.) Kuntze, 1. c. 



Sand-hills and dry pine-barrens. Montgomery, dodge, coffee, 

 irwin, berrien, colquitt. Fl. Aug.-Oct. Inland to the 

 fall-line sand -bills. 

 North Carolina to Florida, in the coastal plain. 



TRILISA Cass., Bull. Soc. Philom. 1818:140. 1818. 

 T. odoratissima (Walt.) Cass., 1. c. "Deer-Tongue." 



Usually in intermediate pine-barrens, throughout the pine- 

 barren region of Georgia. Fl. Aug.-Sept. 

 Virginia to central Florida and Louisiana, in the pine-barrens. 

 For some interesting notes on this species, and a colored 

 plate, see Meehan's Monthly 8:177-178. pi. 12. 1898. 

 T. paniculata (Walt.) Cass., 1. c. 



In similar situations to the preceding, and having about the 

 same distribution in Georgia, but rather less common. Fl. 

 Aug.-Sept. 

 Virginia to northern Florida, in the pine-barrens. 



MIKANIA Willd., Sp. PI. 3:1742. 1804. 

 Willugb^ya Neck., Elem. 1:82. 1790. (Not Willughbeja 



